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Volume XXXVtT.—No. 44-
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ALBANY. QA
.. HAlT
JRDAY. JULY 21: 1883.
Price $2.00 Per Year.
The Albakt Nxwa, established ISAS,The At*
b.nt UmeiB, estahltabedJS77. Consol
idated Sept. ft. Ism.
iuilt Xtvi iKD AonnnsiK k p«bliih<
<• ewry morn in g (Monday exempted.-.
.‘firwa ixo APvnTiNrv ^ifin
■>r>-oU* rooming.
WKlikLV ADVBKTIglKa HATEe.
Tho cottMlktatnd cireoJatlou of the hjews amu
Aorurnn five* our weekly the largest
• Irealatltfb ,.( any be»npaper lu Booth,
■rot, OtwrxU. Oar books are up*-n for Id*
.peciion. The following ratea ol advertising
therefor are pru|twrthjoate<y lower than t bote of
»uy other paper, and will be strictly oteervvd :
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Traarieint advertiae(rents mart be paid for In-
Aet«ao<*e.
All adveiitiM»u»^ute uiiutilake (lie run ol the pa-
f«r oiilcJtd otherwise tipiilatt-.l h« contract,and
then ibe followlug additional <-bir;fe will be re
•juirwl- -• . ; -
taside,generally, : to per o**»
I ostde, next to reading mallei- !1 “ “
lo Local reading colon aa : : M - “
fvditorial notice* other than calling attention
lo new advertisements and local dodgers, 20 cents
i*er lion lor fir^t iut'ertion and 12*^ for each tnb
eqoent.
Kills '—vivertlsiog are due on t he Ural appear-
»«ieaoi'aiivurlLiemeut, or when presumed, excef4
wh«*.n olberwiaecontracted for.
u w. mcintosh a co.
EDITORIAL NOTES.
The rejpction'of Mr. Bray l»j the
Georgia Senate brings Dr. Fell on to
the front again. The Doctor slnn*
the Senate. *k*
Owarlk* Hbtwood Steattok, bet
ter known an Gen. Tom Thumb, died
at h fa residence in Middle born,Mas*.,
last Sunday, of apoplexy.
The Chronicle says - Augusta had
had no liot weather of consequence up
to (late. If Augusta can stand It 4
that way, ih**y need not fear a here*
after
Tn* “sheep skin** and the marriage
certificate of Misa Susie Derry, of Ma
con, hear equal (late. She wa* marri
ed on lhe day of her graduation to
M r. Thud C. Packer.
NEW HOLLAND SPRINGS.
A Few Words About the History
and she Future of Galnesrtlle’s
Water Id* Place.
THE MORTGAGE.
We worked through rnrtng im-i winter,
through summer and through fnl,
Bnt the mortgage worked ihe hardest and tue
steadiest of them ali;
it worked on night?, and vnndeyp, it worked
each holiday;
it settled down among on, and never went
awny.
Whatever we kept from it eremrd ’••moat a*
had as theft;
It watched na every minut .And it ruled us
right and left.
The mat and blight were w ilh iip »<imeti!ne. e .
and iMmetiroea not;
The dar-kbrowed scowling mor gage was for*
« ver on the spot.
I he weevil and the rot worm, t h e> went a*
well as came;
The mortgage stayed forever, eating hearty all
the twine.
it nail« ( d up every w ndow. food guard at
every door.
And h *ppine«o and punshlne made i heir home
with an nn morn.
Till with f IJlr.g crops and Mcknena wc got
stalled upon the grade.
A nd there chme a dark day on us when the in
terest w ’en’t paid;
And there came a sharp ionclO‘*n<e and I
‘kind o’ lor*; my hold.
And grew wparv ami discouraged, and the
farm was cheaply sold.
The children left and scattered. when they
hardly y-1 were grown;
>iy wife she pined anil perished, nn' 1 found
myself alone.
What che died ot was “a myoterv,” an’ the
doctors never knew;
Rut I knew she died of mortgage—just a" well
a 1 warned to.
If to trace a hidden sorrow were within the
doctor’s art,
Thev’d lift’ round u mortgage lying on that wo-
mnn’u broken heart.
Worms or b.ietlc, drought or tempest, on a
farmer’s land may fall.
Rut for drst-class ruination, trust a mortgage
‘gainst them all.
— Will .V. Gi rht&n.
Gainesville Soutl
If people were of cast iron and run by
steam there were no necessity for many
of tbe things which as we are at
organized are indispensable.’ Either for
tunately or unfortunately we are so con
structed that we can stand just so much
and no more of the wear and tearof life,
and then we most either recuperate our
wasted energies, or disease marks ua for
its prey, and death claims us for its
own.
Occasional! v we find a man who in the
burry and rush of a' restless ambition
‘ a tireless energy ignores this phin
. .. steal fact, and suddenly some day
the silver cod is loosened, tbe delicate
musical instrument of tbe mental facul
ties becomes jangled and discordant,
and tlie thread of life is suddenly snap
ped. Ur has simply paid the penalty
of the infraction ofNature’s laws. She
I is a jealous sovereign and will brook no
j disloyalty to her behests.
This hi"’
the name to HniTs Highland Park, and
we predict that in less than five years
from now it will he a household word
from Mason and Dixon’s line to the At
lantic and Qulf. coast. What we have
written, we believe. It is a grand en
terprise, one of which our city and sec
tion is justly proud, and we want to
see it go on to tbe full fruition of the
plans and ambitions of its energetic
manager.
sewsu mews.
Pfrhaps the Herat* had Emory
Speer in view when Bray was re-1 longer question the absolute"necessity
jected. Emory has hi* eye on Nat |
Hammond r spat, and it wn» a good fo thfa irue of those whose daily and
idea to hang a sign, “No Independent • nightly toil is amid the heat and" dust
| and stifling atmosphere of our crowded
cities. At this season of the year every
marriage In China.
On the wedding day theguests as
semble in the bridegroom's house.
Then a procession is formed, consist-'
ingof friends, bands of music, anil
-edan chairs, decorated in red and
gold, with bearers in red coals, and
dressed in a sort of liverv, some
times wearing red caps. Tbe pro
cession starts from the house with a
courier at the head, lie bears a large
piece of pork on a tray, to keep off
malicious demons who msv be.lurk-
ing on the street corners and in the
alleys. These demons are supposed
to iackle the pork, and w idle they
. are thus busied the procession passe,
being true, intelligent people no . nu w.tlinut being affected by their
need apply in Georgia.”
Ar the Fred Dong,a, cnevsnt.nn re- j
cently held iti Austin, Governor Ire* ' dingy nn<J unhealthy town made by man
land, who was present hy invitation. ! oiit into the grand olil w oods, and mmin-
,, . . ! tains, and fragrant meadows, and hoskv
advised tbe colored people in cense | dl . llfi lna(le () * God Alm i K t,ty. In the
n *”
<^ monkpying ,, in pnlitics, snd psy
morei Attention lo I ho inteiler-dml and | < ^® r ^ -.- s
moral improvement of Dieir,i»cp. 000 w> ‘
he.il and dns't and foul 'or-
The News and Advertipei: will l#o
red-hot from now on till th« weather
changes. From the very nature of
things it cannot he otherwise—the
editor fa hot, the printer* sre hot, the
devil is hoi, and half the tim* no ice
to rnol off with.
“Sand Hill*/* near Augusta, ha* a
real English Lady residing there 1 —
Lady Bell. The Chronicle given her
hfatory, manner «»f life, etc., doscrih-
ing her a* a patrician, a fine musician,
and very handsome. She drive* into
Augusta in a pony phaeton and gets
her mail, and from time to lime re
ceives rahlegram* from her noble lord
in England. She fa at Sand ililfa for
the benefit of hor health.
*-
Sanded Colton.
The Columbus Enqvire.r-Snn % com
menting on the action taken hy the
Savannah Cotton Exchange, by
which they propose 10 remedy an ex
isting evil, arraign* them, and ai the
same time pu;s forth some solid
iruthr. ihat it would be well for all
classes to consider;
The matter of sanded cotton, which
was discussed wtih a great deni of
acrimony Iasi year, seems likely to
he brought up again in connection
with this year’s picking. We most,
however, confess onr surprise, at the
step taken in the matter by the Sa
vannah Cotton Exchange. A coni-
inittee from the Exchange have been
making active inquiries, arid has
made a report hy which ihey propose
to remedy any evil that may exist.
L ^4t-rrtfno treat the*report, in the first
place, indignantly denfas that there
ever has beep any loading of cotton
bales with sand and dirt a= a make
weight at any of the presses in that
city. The presence of sand in inju
rious quantities is admit led and re
gretted, but it fa declared to be due
(o misfortune and to carelessness, not
10 dishonesty. In some of the le
gions tributary to Savannah, where
the soil i* light and sandy, and toe
plants grow' snialI, either heavy rains
or high wind* will Dend to fill the
open bolls with sand, and this the
planter* have not been careful fo dean
.n*t. Dnforinamely, neither sellers
inn* buyers lm ve discriminated against
ibis dirti product. As the mer
chants have paid tho same price and
put the same marks on it ns on clean
and carefully handled cotton, the
growers,finding they gained nothing
by being at more pains and more ex
pense to produce a clean crop, have
grown more and more negligent
m this respeci. The report re
commends the factor* m sort and
classify their purcha*es,and lo notify
producers that sharp discriminations
will he made and much lower price*
paid for the lower grades.
That may be very true so far as the
Kavannah market fa concerned, hut
it will not apply generally The
Exchange ought to come right down
to the truth ol ihe whole matter and
say that it is entirely the fault of the
cotton buyer and not at all with the
producer. Thft some cotton cannot
bo haled as clean and iu a* good
order as other cotton, no one who
knov'* anything about it will deny;
hut that the cotton producer realizes
as much for rhe inferior* grade is all
bosh. They don’t, and neither do
they expect it. Tho trouble fa with
ihe agents sent out by manufacturing
Institutions to buy cotton for their
mills when they know nothing at all
about the classification. They make
sheir purchasVs Irom factors whose
business it is to get the best prices
they can and it does not make -any
heavier the pocket of the former.
Any mill that sends our cotton fac
tors orders for cotton may rest as
sured that no sanded cotton will be
put upon them unless it fa hy special
instructions. The Exchange should
be well enough posted to understand
this. * •
Piles I Piles!! Piles!! !
A cure for Blind, Bleeding, Itching
and Ulcerated Pile.*, has buen discov-
W er*d by Dr. William, (an Indian reme
dy.) called Dr. William's Indian
Ointment. A Ringie box has cured
(be worst chronic caso of twenty-five
/ears’ Standing. No one need suffer
minutes after applying this won-
terful soothing medicine. Lotions and
instruments do more harm than good.
William’s Ointment absorbs the tu-
mots, allays the intense itching, (par-
'icularly at night after getting warm
* a bed,) acts as a poultice, give in
stant and painless relief, and is pre
pared only .or Piles, itching of the
private parts, and for nothing else
For sale by all druggists and reali
sed on receipt of. price, |1.00 P. R.
Lance & Co., Proprietors, Cleveland,
Ohio. Welch & Muse, wholesale and
retail agents.
It fa said that there fa nn effort on
foot to so arrange the district* that
Atlanta and'Macon tuay he thrown
into th* name district, mainly inr the
purpose of seeing tbe politicians ol
these cities “going for” each other.—
Avgusta Chronicle.
There would be fnn in thv woods
then. If the Constitution and the
Telegraph and Messenger were
thrown in the same district, they
could not agree upon a man. even
though Ihe Apostle.Paul was rnfapd
from Ihe dead find nominated hy the
Democratic party.
A young Philadelphia lawyer, des
pairing ot clients, lost heirt and
went, to clerking in New York at $b »
week. In a moment of temptation—
a woman, of course, in the case—he
spent $100 which he had collected for
his firm. The jury before whom he
he was tried recommended him to i he
mercy of the court, the foreman fay
ing openly: “We make ibis recom-
menda’Ion because we think that this
young roan was tempted to commit
ihi* crime through Ihe extreme low
ness ot hi* salary.”
It is to he hoped that the newspa
pers will letup for a while on the Lang:
try scandal. The much-advertised
lady will leave on the 24tU for Eng
land, where she will spend the sum
mer. Rhe will return to thfa countrr
and death; in the other
. and the scent of flowers,
the song of birds, the freshness of the
morning, and the elixir of life.
Where can all this be found? In
Gainesville, iu Northeast Georgia, up
here In God V country, w here the moun
tains lift their heads high in air, and
heaven’s dews, cool and refreshing,
run down upon them even as the sacred
oil ran down upon the beard of Aaron,
while at their feet Ihe gushing springs
of the beverage that God has brewed,
rush laughing away down the meadows
ami murmur a song of thanksgiving as
thev toy with and caress the shining
pebbles in their path.
A lovelier spot than New Holland
Springs, two miles from the city, cannot
be found in all this “land of the sky.”
Nature lavished her richest gifts upon
it, and art and taste has supplemented
her work until it fa a perfect eden of
shade and coolness, u hiding walks and
flowing water.
flow* it came about reads like a ro
mance. For a hundred years the spring
itself has been famous. The Indian*
came tc it for a hundred miles, and
Jerked their venison and boiled their
succotash round about Its flowing water,
it fa since the War, however, that some
rude attempts were made at making it
a resort, but only in the last lew’ years
has it attained any notoriety, and fa
only now at the threshold of what it fa
to be.
Four summers ago, a nervous, wiry,!
rest-ess man alighted from an Air-Line !
train at the little platform at New lfol- ‘
land Springs. In hie arms he carried a
pale, emaciated child, and a W’eary,
wan-faced woman followed after.
They had come here as a last hope tq
save the dear one that seemed 60 well-
nigh gone from the clutches of the fell
destroyer that had marked it for Its"
prey. In two months they weut away,
the child in blooming health, and the
mau with his brain lull of a new and
grand object.
lie saw* the possibilities of the place.
He w as quick to act. As soon as it was
possible he had a lease on the property
with the privilege of buying itatastip-
ulated figure, in two months after
wards he had a charter fora stock com
pany, associating with himself such
names as Dr. Willis Westmoreland and
Dr. J. F. Alexander, of Atlanta, and
Dr. J. W. Bailey, of Gainesville, and
others equally well known. Then he
put his lease and his charter ill his
pocket, and-went to work.
If a man was ever tilted for such a
w ork he was. Who fa there that does
not know* W. A. Huff? and it fa he of
whom we have been speaking. It is
worth atrip from any part or Georgia
to Macon to see rhe Central City Park,
and Huff made ll out of a tangled
swamp, and an old field nr two that
bad been given up to brickyards and
bull hats. It fa acknowledged now til
be the finest. Fair (.round and pleasure
in October. The only thing to ho re
grettpd iii ihe Lilyfa departure fa the ! park in the South, ami he made it out
lump of money she takes out of the l " **
country with her, said amount being
estimated at the rotind- figure of
$1.00,000.—Atlanta Journal.
That depends on whether she takes
Freddie with her or not If she will
only take him and keep him, $100,000
would -be dirt cheap for the service
rendered.
Keep cool. Wear a cabbage leaf in
vou hat. Cany a snn umbrella. Don’t
walk on the sonny side of the street.
'Don’t drink too much ice water. Nor
beer. Nor spirits. Don’t overwork.
Don’t worry. Kuock off business in
the heat of the day. Take sponge
bath* every few minutes. Let your
business slide and retire to the cool:
shady, groves. 5 Don’t read political
editorials. Never mind about the
next President. Put it on ice. Cul
tivate perspiration. Sleep, all you
can. Live in your bath room. Never
mind charity, but think of them in
eome'cotf place.- .. '
• v tf iRrWrWbiijt,.
When all other remedies fail. Da.
Faznga'a Boot Brmas will cure
General Debility, Loss of Appetite,
Dyspepsia, and ali diseases arising
from Disordered Stomach, Liver and
Kidneys. "Welch & Muse, wholesale
snd retail agents.
\LlvXLl I uJU
Ex-Commissioner Raum talked to
Commissioner Emins two hours last
Saturday, trying to convince him that
rook and rye was a medicine and note
beserage. Daring the interflow the
article was sampled several time", and
then Mr, Evans decided that it was
nothing'bnt rock candy and rye whis
key, and that it was a beverage. Com-
missloaer Evans . probably imbibed
sufficient to feel it, which doubtless
influenced him some. Banin was very
much digqsted with the decision, as
he lost a large fee thereby. Rock and
rye will make drank come as quick as
any other mixed drink.
Great prejarations are being made
for the entertainment of tbe Grand
Army of the Bepublic, which holds
its 17th annual reitnion and encamp
ment in Denver, Col., beginning the
24th lost. Thirteen hundred wall
tents, each capable of holding 15 per
sons, have been erected. A mam
moth mess-house has just been com
pleted, and a cooking apparatus- ot
sufficient capacity for 20,000 men-:*
in place. Many prominent persons
have signified their intention
present,jamong whom are Gens. J
A. Logan, Scofield, Slocum and. Bar?
num. It is expected there will
20,000 old veterans in line on the 2 1
Gov. Grant will welcome the Grand
Army on behalf of the State, Gen.
Stiman on behalf ot the department of
Colorado and Mayor Routt on behalf lora „
of the city. A Republican Presiden- for she
tial candidate will very likely Be
hatched ont of this reunion.
A cask ot interest was lately de
cided by ihe Supreme Court of Texas.
Melons, were shippid. it Galveston to
Chicago la refrigerating cars.' There
was .an agreement that they should be
carried to Chicago in the same cars.
The shipper retainedlhc\^keys of the
cars, but the cars were broken open
at the end of- the first lin^ and the
melons pnt in the cars of the connect
ing line, less adapted to their safe
transpnrtatioa Some of the melons
rotted and. ihe Shipper sued the rlrst
line and recovered ’ a‘judgment. The
case was appealed lo the Supreme
Court of Texas and the decision was
affirmed. Chief Justice Whillier waft
the organ of the court, and said
the connecting lines were to be con
sidered as ihe agents of the first line
for carrying ont its particular contract,
and therefore the original carrier
should be held'. A similar tuling,
not involving meions, however, was
made in the Civil District Court of
this parish during last term.—Times
Democrat.
of notlilng while lie was Mayor of
Macon. A Sue business man, an ex
perienced hotel keeper and with the
benefit of Bis practical experience in
the matter of parks and pleasure
grounds, he \yae eminently fitted for
the work. And at it he went.' Be did
not sell any stock. He was not ready
for that. He spent (10,000 of bis own
money to show tbe world he had faith'
in his undertaking. He. tore down and
renovated, and built and added to, and
ceiled and plastered and painted and
furnished, till the man from whom he
got it oonld hardly recognize it. He
built a new pagoda over the magnifi
cent spring, erected a depot that is the
handsomest structure of tbe kind in
tbe South, built three miles of new
fancy fencing, ran up a splendid liv
ery stable, and put two hundred guests
on the grounds while other resorts
were bewailing the dullness of the
son. He brought bis old landscape
gardener from the Macon park, gave
him carte blanche and told him to sup
plement nature with every art rnd de
vice jtnO^h to the trade. Walks were
laid out, roods were straightened and
macadcmized, dust and mud/made im-
posstble.groves trimmed, and still the
work goes on. It seems complete now,
as though Aladdin's wonderful lamp
and its loyal Genie had- done -their
greatest work.
What more 7 Well we shall
To-day there are more guests, on the
Hew Holland grounds than at all other
watering places In Georgia combined.
It is destined to be to the South the one
great mecca of pleasure to which’ not a
hundred or two but a thousand
will come every summer. -It is but as
yet in Its infancy. Hoff is nOw ready
retake his charter out of his pooket,
and nay re the world, “You see what I
have done, yon see the snccessl have
made. I can multiply it by ten if ynp
w ill give me the mqASEfcvii&i om
the grounds is full; I could fill 500 more
if Ij had them. A hotel beside which the
ent structure will be a merecot-
iswhat we must have.”
Hie should respond liberally.
She is reaping the benefits of this en
terprise? She ought to show her ap?
predation of it and help to push it 10
the grand conclusion upon which Huff
has nxed his ambition. He has the en
ergy, the brain, and the integrity to
carry it to success. Atlanta cannot af
ford to sit idle. '
which
tin
must come to get here: It is
fifty miles of he door, her citi
zens need it for rest and recreation, it
is peculiarly her resort, and she should
take a local pride iu seeing it Becond to
none. The Air-line railroad has much
at stake likewise, for it must bring the
people.' None can get here without
paying it toll, and it should press the
enterprise with solid subscription. But
' ,ve said little or nothing about tfie;
it season. ‘No such success has
been scored in the annals of Geor-
watering places, and they come by
every train. Mr. Huff being the pro
of the celebrated Markham
, K Atlanta, rana the two in con
nection, and persons can go from one to
the other at will, the rates being the
same at both places. The amuseinent3
Include everything in that line, the
cuisine is unsurpassed. Bar, billiards,
driving, music—everything to make
the stay of guests all that can be .de-
_ sired. The future of this resort is hard
. j to predict. What it may, can and will
become iu the hands of a man like Huff
it would sound like the wildest exag
geration to even approximate. When
we seewhat he has accomplished in one
short season with tbe limited means of
bis own personal purse how shall we
estimate what will be possible with a
liberal and wealthy stork company at
his back? It is biit a fit cimpliment to
evil influence. At this time the
bride i« at tier own house, arraying
hen-elf in tier best dress and richeai
jewel-. Her hair is bound up and
arranged in due fork, and style by a
skilled mm ron. After Ibis her head
dress is donned, ll usually consists
of Minie rirli material sprinkled with
ornaments. A large mantle is lh< n
thrown over her. It completely cov
er* her. Last of ali in enormous
hal, as large as an umbrella, is placed
on her head, it ■ nines down to hei
-boulders completely biding her
face. Thus rigged, she takes her
seal in the red gilt niarrisge ehair,
called kwa-kls i. When ronrealed
in this chair she iscirried to her
husband hy four men.
When the bride is seated in the
chair; her mother or some other
relative lock- the door, and the key
is given to the best man. 1 suppose;
be turns u over lo the bridegroom'
on. reaching his house. The proces
sion returns with more rare nud
more style. I -aw one during a ram*,
bic in a Chinese town. As the bride
waT borne past us we gave her three
cheers. 1 dare -ay that all her rhil
dren will be either knock-kneed or
bow-legged, bemuse of the cheers of
the barbarian-. Good lock to the
poor bollled-np one. She had.the
best wishes of ali onr party, as we
followed the proees-ion for some
squares, to the great astonishment of
all the Chinamen on the street.
As the procession approached the
bridegroom's door a bard stationed
there struck up a tone, and fire
crackers were let off by tbe box until
Ihe bride was cart led in Die gale.
The gn-hetweeu then got the key
from I lie bridegroom and opened the
door of the sedan chair. As the bride
alighted she was saluted by a small
child at the side of the old man. The
groom was closeted within the house,
mid -he went ill to seek hint: She
still wore the enortnoos bat and
mantle. When she found the groom
he greeted her with great gravity.
They both approached the ancestral
tablet and bowed their heads three
lime-. Thev next took their seats at
a small table bearing two goblets
tied together with . thread and con
taining wine. The gn-brtweeu sev
ered the thread, but the bride foiled
to quencffvher thirst, owing to her
enormous hat and mantle.
The two were now man and wife.
Tiie husband took the hat and man-
tie from the bride, and for the first
time in liis life had o long look at
her. After lie looked ot her for some
minutes he called in his friends and
guests. They scrutinized her and
■unde ro bones of expressing their
opinions concerning h?r charms.
The females gave their tongues full
scope and had uo mercy on the poor
bride. She took it all without mak
ing any disagreeable answer, for fear
that the match wnuld be considered
an unlucky one. These cruel criti
cisms ended, -he was introduced to
her husband's parents, after which
she saluted her own r atlierand moth
er. The wedding feast 'was then
served, the sex-s eating in different
apart men I-. The males were served
by the bridegroom and his male rel
atives, amt the females by the bride
and her molher-in-Iow, assisted by
servants. The two sexes rarely sit
down ot the some table. Marriage
is very common among the Chinese.
Yoh hardly ever come across a girl
of sixteen or eighteen who is not
tied down to some man.
— 1 —
Bailey's Saline Afv-iiert is a
white powder, and when placed in
water, foams, sparkles, and tastes
just like soda water. It is very cool-
lug and pleasant, Rets gently upon
the bowels, relieves constipation,
enres sick headache, sour stomomach
and heartburn.
w-t MOMi k.
TEXAS INVESTING IN GEORGIA.
Bz Sal* or Cottle ins sheep in Glynn
County—The Texas Cattle King In
vests $12,588.
—Diptlicria prevail* ink Green
county.
—Crops ere excellent in Irwin
county. Irwin always makes enough
and to spare.
—The Coffee County Cazetle says
huge are -till dying with cholera in
that section.
—Coffee county wants more school
teachers. Thi-is well. Coffee is on
the right line.
■There are 115 whiles and 1,100
blocks in the Georgia penitentiary,
making a total of 1,215.
—Editor Perhim warns stations
all along the line that Quitman will
ship more melons than any of them.
—Judge Gerdoq, of Catoosa cojin-
ty, is baling up his Confederate
money anil selling'it at $4 on the
1,000.
—More boy'b-.bies have arrived in
town this year than atsuy other time r -
within the memory ot the oldest in- man to his neighbors, a charitable
i.hmn.in. mau to the poor, a favorable man m
habitants, bparta IshmaehU. titheSj a £ d a ’ good , and iord to his
-Tiim Harper, of Coffee county, | tenants. There sits one, Mr. Spuy-
hns caught over 400 fish With one gen, can ten how great a slim he for-
1 gave him on his death bed; it was
tour-score pounds. Now, beloved,
A Cartons sermon.
The following old sermon is said
to have been actually preached,many
years since in the parish church of.
Barston, Norfolk. It was printed in
the British Magazine for Noveni
her, 1750. Host of the names men
tioned now stand in the parish regis
ters, and the family names still exist
in the neighborhood:
“fight the good fioht.” _
1st Tim. vi. 12.—Beloved, we are
met together to solemnize lie funeral
of Mr. Procter. His father’s name
was Mr. Thomas Proctor. He lived
sometime at Barston Hall, in Nor-,
‘oik, and was high constable of Diss
hundred. This man’s name was Rob
ert Proctor; and his wife was Mrs.
Buxton, late wife of Mr. Mathew
Buxton. She came from Helsdou
Hall, beyond Norwich. He was a
good hatband, snd she a good house
wife;, and Ahoy two
she"
her
But now, beloved, I shall make it
clear by demonstrative argument-,
first, he was a good mau, and that ill
several respects, lie was a loving
TWO COLORED CON'VEN'TIO N
CONTRASTED.
Tbe Colored -Editors In St. Louis,
and tbe Colored IUeii*s State Con
vention In Calveetori.
e; and they two. made money; c*l party, or to be tied to any politi-
brooght a thousand pounds with cal kite, and pledging, the Colored
for her portion. Press Association to henceforward
hook, and now nfloiw it for aale for
$10. Be should keep the hook and
sell fish.
While some railroad hands were
bathing in Oconee river Saturday ot
last week, one:of them was drowned
was n it this a good man, and a man
of God, think you? and his wife a
good woman? and she cemes Irom
Heisdon Hall, beyond Norwich. This
is the first argument.
Secondly, to prove this man to be
tee bn Bcsolutions submitted a series
of resolutions declaring in favor of
the education of the races "and ot
mixed schools and teachers; Urging
the pursuit of the industrial arts by
negroes, pledging every means iu
their power "to open up machine
shops, factories and industrial schools
to the negro yonth as apprentices
and students; advising negroes to pre
empt or purchase public lauds: fa
voring the improvement of naviga
tion on the Mississippi river,and pro
tection of its banks from 1 overflow ;
declaring it detrimental to the best
interests of the negro race and repug
nant to ideal political manhood to be
made tho tool of any existing poiiti-
tied to any poiiti-
Bmotvleb Advertiser sod Apt eat
The sale of the caltle and sheep of
the estate of John M. Tison, of ibis'
county, took place on Tuesday last,
as advert!sed-bringing the handsome
sum of $12^88. There were 1,104
head of cattle and 330 head of 1 ‘ _
the former bringing-$10:75 eacti'’and
the latter $2.25 each. . The pnri
was the great cattle king of Texi
Mr. Robert Stafford, formerly of
Glynn county, and brother of
Mr.* Hardy Stafford, who llTes near
Waynesville.
Quite a number of parties were
present who expected to be bidders,
bnt none were found who seemed
willing to tackle the Texan except
Mr. T. W. Lamb. He stood his own
very well tip to $105), but-wbeh Mr.
~ afford put on the additional twen-
-five cents he yielded, the-prize. It
has been estimated that $2,000,000
were represented among those who
bid or came to bid. Such trades as
these, we understand, are common
occurences for Mr. Stafford, whose,
operations extend from Mexico to
the Canada line. We are glad to
know that this handsome herd of
cattle and sheep will remain m Glynn
county and be managed by Mr. Hardy surr.
n i __ n- _ Stafford. Texas is simply transfer-
She* too Is interested | rin 2 °Yer $12,000of its wealth to this
locality.
An Arkansas journalist in assum
ing control of the local columns of a
weekly paper, says: The proprietors
of the skillet have deemed it advisa
ble for me to lend my influence to
this great enterprise. I am an old
hand at the business, and come
highly recommended, having been
rail out of the swamp land district
on account of a delicately expressed
sentiment to the effect that the coun
ty judge wa3 a thief of no small ca
pacity. So long as tbe judge? of this
county remains ‘"honest, or, rather,
is not caught stealing anything. I
may stay with you and help you de
velops "the wonderful resources of
this section; bnt just so soon as he
is proved to be a thief, I reckon I'll
have to slide. I take this method of
informing the people that I Will
preach at the Clay Hill church next
Sunday.
before his associates could render a good man; in the time of his sick-
Basietanre ness, which was long and tedious, he
any assistance. . sent for Mr. Cole to pray for him.
—Dr. • Wilkinson'* residence, in jje wttg not , self-ended man, .to be
Qaitman, wa*'burneil last Thursday prayed for himself only; no, beloved,
morning. Loss $1,600, covered by he desired Mr. Cole to pray for all
. tac J. flit neighbors and acquaintances; for
insurance In Hie amount of $800. Ur B Sxton’s worship, and Mrs.
The origin of the fire, is unknown. Buxton, and for Mr. Buxton’s
—The CoInneEs island property children, against it should please God
was purchased; iast sale day by Col. |
loved, was this not a good man ? and
Ira E. Smith, of ihl* city. The place
could be made a |>erfcct paradise.
Some millionaire will want it before
a great while.— Advertiser and Ap
peal.
. —A hill has been introduced into
the Legislature to regulate the Use
of the stuff known as oleomargarine.
It requires alt hotels Using this vile I
compound to put the public on no- | boy
lice of the fact by poster* in their
offices and room?.
—An accident occurred nn Dodge’s
railroad, in Telfair county, last week,
by which three negroes were killed
and nine o|he<* wounded, inme
fatally. The accident was raused by
the train parsing over a
trealle on llorse'errek.
his wife a good woman? and she
came from Heisdon Hall, beyond
Norwich. This is the second argu
ment.
Thirdly, I come to a clear demon
strative argument to prove this to be
a good man. There was one Thomas
Proctor, a very poor beggar boy; he
came into this country on a dun cow;
■ a dun cow. Well, this poor
came a-begging to this good
man's door. He did not do as some
would have done, give him a small
alms and send him away, or chide
him, and make him a pass and send
him info his own country; no, be
loved, ' he took him into his own
house, and afterwards bound him ap
prentice to a gunsmith. After his
time was out, he took hitn home
... WM oul '
burning again, and married him to a kinswo-
' man of bis wife’s—Mrs. Christian
Bobertson—there she sits; and to
—Greensboro Ileraldz - Mr.- Jeff ber this good man gave a consider-
T. Malone has a cow tha*. has been able joiutnre. By her he had three
giving about five gallon, of milk a I daughters; and this good man took
home tho eldest, brought her up to
woman’s estate, and married her to a
very honorable gentleman, Mr. Bux
ton, there he sits. Now, beloved, was
not this a good man, and a man of
God, think you ? and his wife a good
woman ? and she came from Heisdon
Hall, beyond Norwich.
Beloved, yon may remember some
time since. I preached at the funeral
• ,, ... ... , , of Mrs. Proctor; at which time 1
ed for the largest and best melons. trollbled yon with m ,ny ofher trans
it was a very enjoyable occasion, I eondent virtues; but your memories
and the penple cf Brooks will have | may fail yoo,_ therefore I shall now
day. Recently one of the teats of
the"cow was torn entirely out; and
it is feared this wa* the work of a
mad dog.
—Quitman indulged in a big water
melon cutting the other day,at which
there were three or four hundred
persona [ resent. Prizes were offer-
anolher.
—A man lives u few miles above
Athens, who eats .in one county,
sleeps in unnlher, : smokes when sit.
ting upon his. pinizu in a thild, and
has Imili his barn, in a fourth. He
remind yoa of one or two of them.
The first is, sho was as good a knit
ter ns any in the county of Norfolk.
When her husband and family
were in bed asleep, she would get a
cushion, clap herself down by tbe fire
and sit and knit, but, beloved, she
was|no prodigal woman, but a spar-
lives where Jour counties corner, ing ’woman; for, to spare a caudle,
and is as- ini epentjent of legal offi
cer* as « tvnoil '^awyer.—Banner- j
Watchman.
—On a farm near Calhoun there
are three families or white people,
cpniisting of eight adults and three
children, notone of, whom can read
or write; nor is there a Bible in any
of their houses, and yet the good
she would stir up the fire with her
knittmg pins, and by that light would
sit and knit, and ma'ke as good work
as many other women by daylight.
Beloved, I have a, pair of stockings
on my legs that were knit in <he same
manner, and they are the best stock-
inga that I ever wore in my life.
condly, she was tbe best maker
of toast in drink that I ever eat in
my life; and they were brown toasts,
too. When I used to go in of a
people of this villagayearly subscribe wonM ask ml to eat
quite a sum of money to buy Bibles toast, which I was always willing to
for the poor heathen in foreign do, for she had such nn artificial way
lands. of toasting it, by no means slack, nor
burning—besides, she had such a
—If those. yonng men, or rather pretty way of. grating nntraeg and
over-grown boys, who sometimes dipping it in the beer; and such a
plav ball in front, of the editor's resi-TPirce of rare cheese, that I most say
dence. and'make the air hideous with ,h8t l hcy . wcre ,' he bc9t loxot th “'
ever I eat in my lire,
oaths, etc., don f want their names in Well, beloved, the days are short,
print, they would do well to change and many of you have a long way lo
either their Atrae or their language — | go; I must, therefore, conclude,
Brunswick Advertiser. That’s just
influence, under all circumstances,
tbe voters of the country to exercise
their right of suffrage untrammeled
by parly claims; to support meas
ures and principles, as they conceive
them to be for the best interests Of
the country and race; and demand
recognition commensurate with the
strength of tbe colored voters of the
couutrv of that parly to which they
may see fit to become allies, and
henceforth to occupy the same inde
pendent position as is occupied by
Swedes, Germans, and other citizens.
Resolutions were also adopted, stating
that the convention was in sympathy
with the Republican party on the tar-
iff question; and urging, that the
word “negro,” be written and print
ed with a capital “N.”
Daring the debate oh the resolu
tions'Miss Annie C. Sneed, daughter
of Samuel K. Sneed, of Kentucky,
who she said, freed his slaves ahc .
made bimsel f poor because he thought
it right, was introduced arnf made a
speech to the convention as did also
Mrs. Alice Peterson. Both of these
ladies spoke on the subject of tem
perance, especially urging the chil
dren be instructed regarding the
evils of alcohol. A full list of of
ficers were elected for the'ensuing
year, headed hy W. A. Pledger, of
Georgia, as President
Galveston, July 13.—An Austin
special says that the Colored Men’s
State Convention, before adjourn
ment, adopted an add re.-a to the peo
pie, which uongra ulates the State
upon the friendly relations of Ibe
races in Texas; assumes that the few
cases of wrong and oppre&iori upon
the colored, people are exceptional,
and that the great body of whiles are
friendly; condemns lynch law; as
serts that as railway passengers ne
groes are badly treated; says that,
they do not want in this matter to
ask for social equality, but will will
freely accept social separation with
equal accommodations on trains for
the same pay; advises their people
to discharge ignorant and immoral
teachers and preachers whose teach
ing’ and example keep, superstition
and vice alive; discourages 'immi
gration from the State, and even
from county to county, unless for
tbe best of reasons; recommends Ihe
purchase of lands and homes and the
production of home comfort* and the
necessaries of life before prndneing
articles for sale, and that y oung men
shonld be' encouraged to learn
trades; counsels local organizations
to encourage all these aims; advises
against petty litigation and recom
mends teachers and leaders to en
courage friendly relations with the
whites. Tbe closing paragraph lets
the Republican party know that tbe
colored people remain solid in that
organization.
TStr
Tit Pnllie is requested carefully to notice tie
F ^4W* I idteys^f^ Ilriienet to, it drvson
K^I^MtTAL PRIZE,$75,000.-go*
Tickets ,out j $5. Shares In propor-
.lion.
Mm Silts litty; It.
- “ ffe do hereby certify hat tee eupervite
tie arrangements for all tie Monthly and
Semi-Snnual Dratcingt of The Louieiana
State Lottery Company, and jin
person manage and control tie Droning!
tiemeelvee, and that tie came art conducted
toitk horn sty, faimtet. and in good faith to-
teardt a IT parties j and me anti arise tie Com
pany ’to uie this certificate, tenth fac-tmilet
attached, f n,te,adtl.e r tits-
Absolutely Pure.
-*3swffaaaast
fitM ths ordinary kinds, and cacsot be sold la
cane.
ROYAL BAKING POWDEITCO..
nort-dwlv NawYoax:
■ Commissioner*
Incorporated fit tsts 'or U Tears hr the 1
WatwjBBXihiBathwal and i, haitt. Me |
poses—with * capital of |t.ro ,rttt to w' I.
s l eg-
Mepor-
_ . ... .ow'leh*
rewv* fand of over ,?».',00 hM uoee boon
By an overwhelming popular vote It* fran-
chiae waa made a part of the present State
Constitution adopted December M, A. D.
Tie only Lottery aer vied on and endorsed by tie
p*a*sf€*jf few.
It never scales or postpones.
ui‘S W
A SPI END D OPPOItTtJ'ITY to
Tssmap" 114 ’ 1883-1 sst "
CAPITAL PRIZE, S75.000.
0 tickets at Five Dollars Faeb
lions, in Fifths In proportion.
what they waiit. Moat people “strive
to enter in. at the straight gate,”tyit if
they fail on that, they ore willing to
take a little newspaper notoriety any
way they can get It?
—An old negro,'who claims to
drive the mail wagon :ntnniug be
tween Columbus and Shiloh, Harris
county, has been warned not to ap
pear in Columbns again by the So
ciety for the Prevention of Cruelty
to Animals, bn the ground that his
horse is rendered unfit for service
on account of a patuful sore on his
back. The aged colored man re
plied that he did not have sufficient
money to bny another horse, and
would write to Washington for in
structions. If tho department de
cides against him he will be obliged
to give up his mail eontract.
I suffered with toothache and used
all tbe remedies that are usually used
for relieving pain. Did not get relief
until I bought a bottle of Anodyne
Oil. Duncan McLean,
j j!4-2t Camilla, Go.
It takes an Irishman to tarn a
compliment. "When he saw Jones,
after having met the latter with
Mrs. J., Pat Flaherty said: “Ye are
mooch younger than yonr wife, j
Presently he met the wife
and remarked: “The idea of sich a
youug woman marrying Misther
Jones I” The next day he met them
together, but he wasn’t at a loss for
blarney. “Och,’’ he exclaimed “ye
are both of yez too young for each
other.”
A tar* Con far Ihla Itwasw.
Buy Dr. Frazier’s Magic Ointment.
Cures «»IT.by magic: Pimples, Black
Heads or Grubs, Blotches, and Erup
tions on the Face, leaving tho skin
clear, healthy and' bountiful. Also
cures Itch, Salt Bheum, Sore Nipple*,
Sore Lips, Old, Obstinate Ulcers and
Sofea,etc. . ■,
Sold by all druggists and mailed
on receipt of price, 50 cents. P. R.
Lance A Co., proprietors, Cleveland,
Ohio, Watch It Moie wholesale and
retail agents.
English Female Bitters sends red
blood to a sickly woman's cheeks and
strength ’jo her muscles, by givtor on
appetite, aiding digestion and building
up tbe system. All sickly women who
need a never-falling female regulator.
Iff IVtwiG art;
will be delighted with i's prompt and
him that his friends insist on changing reliable action.
A atBLjshould be taught to deleft
two things thoroughly—idleness and
aimlessness. These two enemies have
given birth to ennui, which is pian.
if she he a child of fortune, instruct
her, even more than if the were poor,
to work in some definite manner for
pleasure's own sake. More than all,
train her hands and itir ber brain
with the constant asturanee that she
will find her sweetest satisfaction in
that which she is to accomplish in
Hfe.
The Baa* Snake story.
A New Haven dispatch to the
World, of Joly 10th, says that crowds
of people visited Railroad Grove,
Savin Rock, yesterday, to witness
the nnnsnal spectacle of a boa con
strictor 23 feet long and aboutIwo
feet in circumference laying eggs
under a tent there.
The snake ie owned by Frank J.
Pilling, the well-known business
ger of the actress, Annie Pix-
iey. It was bronght from Calcutta
and is worth about $2,000.
Mr. Kiting always supposed he
owned a male snake, and was always
hilled as the Jnmbo Python. Lost
night he placed it in its box for the
night, as ostial, covered with blank
When he qpme to look into the
box in the morning, greet was his
astonishment to see that during Ihe
night the snake had laid about sixty
or seventy eggs about as big as
goose eggs." and it was still laying.
The eggs were white and soft, hav
ing no shell. Some were roand and
some oblong: They coold be stretch-
ed like India rubber. They were in
a neatly formed pyramid, around
which the snake lay circled. She
was quite cross and resented being
bandied.
Mr. Pilling was greatly excited.
“To think,” he, said, “that all the
while I’ve had that snake I al ways
took it for a male until to-day. I
bought it in New York at Central
Park Gardens, anil there, too, it was
called a male. I have sold it to the
management of the Zoological Gar
dens in Philadelphia, to be deliver-
ed September L I am going to try
and hatch ont some of these eggs,
and shall place some In sand near
where the cooking fnrnnce.at Thale's
restaurant is, and shall bury some in
the sand down hy the rock, where
the snr. can help along the hatching
process. Some of the eggs I shall
make into an omelet, just to see how
snake’s eggs will taste. Most of the
egga I shall leave with the snake, and
perhapsshe will hutch them out in
some way.”
I am using Anodyne Oil for Rhen-
tnatism. It is the best medicine I
have ever used, and I will always
keep it in my house.
H. H. MEcElvet,
j!4-2t Camilla, Ga.
Problem or Adding to
man’s Stature Solved.
New York Time*
If the London World is to be be
lieved—and in spite of ite name it
generally tells the truth—the fash
ionable women of England have
really discovered a way of increas
ing their height, not hy the fictitious
aid of high-heeled bouts, but by ac
tually stretching their bodies.
By degrees women h tve learned
to “make themselves over” as if they
were old dresses. If teeth and hair
are missing they can be replaced
with artificial teeth and bair, while
legs, arms and eyes almost as good
as those supplied by natme can be
bought in the shops. The female
form can be padded until it is round
and shapely; paint can hide an un
desirable complexion, and a year or
two ago a German discovered "how to
change at will the color of the hu
man eye. Hitherto, however, the
■mall woman has been unable total-
ly to add to her height except by
wearing high-beeled shoes. If she
happened to be little she could
never make herself tall. There was
really no hope for the “dumpy” wo
man—no way in which she could
correct the error of nature.
At last tbe problem of adding to a
woman's stature has been solved. It
occurred to an intelligent man—who
eras presumably a physician and was
certainly married—that the human
form is to a certain extent elastic.
We are taller in Ihe morning than
we are at night, because the body
while resting in a horizontal position
regains by its elasticity what it has
lost during the day by the operation
of gravitation. Moreover, the nse of
the corset has demotistrarod that the
female form is elastic. Tae waist
may be*compressed,but a coinpensat
ing expansion takes place in the other
parts of the body. Whenever a cable
inch of fUsh is pushed away front the
region of the waist by the' corset, it
makes its appearance elsewhere. In
fact the corset re-arranges its wearer
and diffuses her waist instead ot par
tially annihilating it. Now, if half a
woman’s waist can be transferred
from her belt to her shoulders, why
should it not be possible to increase
Iter height by squeezing her whole
body in an elongated corset ? This
is what the intelligent inventor has
done, and it is by a combined system
ot pressure and stretching tbat'shori
women are now made long.
The woman who is to undergo this
process is incased in a very tight cor
set, and her feet are pui in shoes
weighted with fifty pounds of lead
each. She is then placed in. a ma
chine consisting of a ring which en
circles her waist and is suspended
from the ceiling at such' a height as
to prevent her feet from touching
the ground. The pressure of the
corset forces the upper part of the
body upward, aud the weight of the
*hoes stretches her from her waist
downward. Of course tbe bones of
the human body cannot he artificially
elongatod, buy the joints can he
stretched. It is estimated that the
extreme length to which the epilie
can be stretched bv the process thus
described is two inches, and that the
knee, ankle, and hip joints can be
stretched an inch and a-half more.
Thus three Inches and a-half can be
added to the height of any woman
who has the courage to undergo Ihe
trouble and pain necessarily connect
ed with Ihe stretching process.lasling,
with brief interruptions, during five
or six months. Three inches and
a-half will, however," in "many in-j
stances, transform an insignificant 1
woman into a graceful and even mii-;
jestic woman, and there are few small
women who will not he ready to bo j
converted into comparatively tall
women at the cost of six months of
seclusion from society.
JAMESM. SMITH
CAMPBELL WAL
L. N. TRAMMELL.
Commissioners..
LUMBER RATES BRUNSWICK
WESTERN RAILROAD.
1—On and after Wednesday, An
- on the railr ad known o
sion aa the I'runswfck
ft. “83,
. Commia
■Iffi iif W-Atern
(formerl> Bran-wick »«d Albanj) holt-
roa-; no more than Cia-s P. of the Coin-
mu*toners’ ran* :r-aten (to; per rent
■hall be the the maximum rate- of turn,
ber hauled In any direction over euld
road.
a—The weight of a car load of lumber Is 22,-
£00 Ibe. .
3—Any avoidable failni e od the pari of this
railroad in fnrnivhlitg cars and tram-
porting »hera, spee-Jih, wb n 1 a«!ed
will be considered an evasion of this
order.
f—Tt e achedn e of Miflers* lu-niter ratea for
ua dbo i ot less than m cars an. fur trains
of not less tha 15 car*, as pr»vld u and
al owed in Circular No , dated Atlan
ta, Ga., April 2>th, 18 0, is hereby re
pealed. •
5—Printed tsrttie nf the rates required bv this'
Circular must be fur- Isbed the Com-
n lasiooere’ office on or before tbe acth
of July, S 8. .
JAMES M. SMITH, Chairman.
A.C. BRISCOE,Seen tiry. la*4w
CrRCTJLjim UO. 30.
OFFICE OF THE RtILRO\DCUMM! SPIN
OF GEORGIA,
nlOHM’rit r*.g; fei.j-'.’J . " •*
Atlanta, Ga., June 2 th, «c;
JAMES M. *MITH. >
oAMI'BI’LL WaLLAC > Commissioner*.
L. X. TRAM ME. L. J.
JNCEEaSlD FREIGHT DEPOT FACILI-
IL’S.
1—It Is hereby ordered >hat G*<ch railroad
company in this State at «;trh and eveiy
freight nation shall provide on or l eu»r.»
the first day or September next »mple
and suitable depot or sbed-rooti. for • he
r ception and |.rotecilon from tli it or
damage by wea>h i of all • tto or* fli
er art cle* or n ercha •*ims bat nmy li
oflen*d them fo IM EI»I *T slip t »;t
overth-ir resi-ctiv row s
2d—^Vhere oepot ro in hr<ti nuwnffi !<■* i*»
meet this rcquireme t, -die pi «on
atructed wooden sheds mar l»e supple
roenUd to full protect tfie ott*»n or
other merchandise fiorei from dnmp-
nes* »*y c ntiu* w th the ground, tales
oroV' rhead-
8—Railr ads are not required to receive cot
ton or other merchandise and warehouse
the same n less the article* offered are
in good shipping con *itt*»n, well prepar
ed by proper packing an l inte ligeut,
plain marking, and ac ompanied with
orders for immediate shipment.
A. C. URIdCOE. < Jx .* S5 41. *»%1TH.
Secretary. Cbaliman.
Iaw4w
LIST QF ^
1 CAPITAL PRIZE....... .... 575.0 0
1 do do* 13.0 0
1 do do., I'a"l*
2 PRIZES OF WOO 12,wo
5. uo 20 0... 10,00
.10; do J(,00...; 10. (K*
20 do 6 0 J,fr0,
i«0 do 2 0 - 2* ,• 00
too do loo..../. a *ou
oo do • 2 ,»
lOOO do .2*...,.. ... 25.0C0
APPROXIMATION PBlzCS.
9 Approximation Priree of $7-0 0,750
9 do do »0 .... *.40
9 . do do 250.;.... 2 o
1967 Prises, amounting to..;...:.'. _ 6265/0,
Application for rates to clubs s'ojld be
made on y to the office o the Company in
N !Sr°&i : - • •• •
tag full ad dr ei
or Mail, addressed only to'
hi. A. DAUPHIN,
New Orleans, La.
orpM. A. DAUPHIN, •
60? Seventh street*
Washington, D. C.
Mt-rt-waatSw-wSt, :
cmcrpx^R, .:iro- 37.
OFFICE OFTHE RAILROAD COMMISSION
OF GEORGIA,
Atlanta, GA., Juno 27tb, !8S1.
m nn ai advertises
JOB OFFICE
t».prfpiraJIto;compcte with Acy;ettAblijhnien t In
* ; the State in
JOB PK1NTING !
In All Its Branches.
We keep op with tbe times, and have as skilleo
workmen and is good presses u can be found
In the State, and guarantee Batbfaction to those
who favor us wilh their orders. x. u il line of
RIKTERS’SmiQHERT
always on hand, and those wno will call at our
office can make their selections from a large as
sortment. Just received, a new stock of paper
^tter Heads,
Bill Heads,
. Note Heads,
Statements;
Account Sales,
Etc., Etc.
Also a genera assortment of
ENVELOPES
BUSINESS CARDS
Orders by mail promptly attended to.
M. RE. PVcINTOMH Sc CO.
MACO 3iT
A First-class
COMMERCE Business School.
COLLEGE ^ tt,l * oM5f ^ ort * ,or ^ oa ^